In a digital landscape fraught with evolving threats, the marriage of artificial intelligence (AI) and cybercrime has become a potent concern. Recent revelations from Microsoft and OpenAI underscore the alarming trend of malicious actors harnessing advanced language models (LLMs) to bolster their cyber operations.
The collaboration between these tech giants has shed light on the exploitation of AI tools by state-sponsored hacking groups from Russia, North Korea, Iran, and China, signalling a new frontier in cyber warfare.
According to Microsoft’s latest research, groups like Strontium, also known as APT28 or Fancy Bear, notorious for their role in high-profile breaches including the hacking of Hillary Clinton’s 2016 presidential campaign, have turned to LLMs to gain insights into sensitive technologies.
Their utilization spans from deciphering satellite communication protocols to automating technical operations through scripting tasks like file manipulation and data selection. This sophisticated application of AI underscores the adaptability and ingenuity of cybercriminals in leveraging emerging technologies to further their malicious agendas.
The Thallium group from North Korea and Iranian hackers of the Curium group have followed suit, utilizing LLMs to bolster their capabilities in researching vulnerabilities, crafting phishing campaigns, and evading detection mechanisms.
Similarly, Chinese state-affiliated threat actors h
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This article has been indexed from CySecurity News – Latest Information Security and Hacking Incidents
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